Knut Boehnert (5/2/2008)That was a very nice question for a Friday morning.

I'd have to disagree. I think these ones about working out pointless conditions to satisfy one off special cases that nobody will EVER use, are more about your ability (and level of interest) in working out what's different about those months than the others. As such, they have almost nothing to to with T-SQL (which was the 'Question Type') other than that they chose to write the solution in it. I imagine many people will simply guess yes (there's usually a way to do anything that starts with 'is there a way...') without really knowing why. I decided to be contrary and guessed no, based on the last (equally pointless) one of these being 'yes'.

Knut Boehnert (5/2/2008)That was a very nice question for a Friday morning.

I'd have to disagree. I think these ones about working out pointless conditions to satisfy one off special cases that nobody will EVER use, are more about your ability (and level of interest) in working out what's different about those months than the others. As such, they have almost nothing to to with T-SQL (which was the 'Question Type') other than that they chose to write the solution in it. I imagine many people will simply guess yes (there's usually a way to do anything that starts with 'is there a way...') without really knowing why. I decided to be contrary and guessed no, based on the last (equally pointless) one of these being 'yes'.

-- Kev

Kevin all solutions may not be the best but sometimes these type of solutions/questions shake our brains. We sometimes do monotonous work, so this solutions help us to break the shackle. We learnt something differently is also interesting.